Ancient period . While the name Messenia is not mentioned in the oldest work of European literature, the
Iliad, several of the towns present there are, as the 7 cities offered by Agamemnon to Achilles to persuade him to return to battle. The name undoubtedly goes back to at least the Bronze Age, but its origins are lost in the world of mythology. The region was one of the largest that was conquered and enslaved as
helots by
ancient Sparta.
Medieval period In the
Middle Ages, Messenia shared the fortunes of the rest of the Peloponnese. Striking reminders of these conflicts are afforded by the extant ruins of the medieval strongholds of Kalamata, Coron (anc. Asine, mod. Koroni), Modon (Methoni) and Pylos. Messenia was a part of the
Byzantine Empire until 1205, and of the
Principality of Achaea thereafter, while the ports of Coron and Modon came under
Venetian control. Apart from Coron and Modon, the rest of Messenia was captured by the Byzantine
Despotate of the Morea in 1430.
Ottoman and Venetian period Much of Messenia fell into the hands of the
Ottoman Empire in 1460, a part of the area remained with the
Venetian Republic until the
Second Ottoman–Venetian War (1499–1503). In 1534 a group of families, known as the 'Coroni', settled in
Piana degli Albanesi in Sicily. They were
Arvanites and Greeks from
Koroni. During the 1680s, the whole of Messenia was regained by the Venetian Republic in the
Morean War, and formed part of the "
Kingdom of the Morea" until
recovered by the Ottomans in 1715. The
Mani Peninsula, a part of modern Messenia, remained autonomous from Turkish rule.
Modern period Messenia became part of independent Greece as a result of the
Greek War of Independence (1821-1832). The famous naval
Battle of Navarino took place near present Pylos in 1827, and was a decisive victory for Greece and its allies. During the
World War II several battles of the
Greek Resistance against the
Nazi occupation forces and the collaborationist
security battalions took place in Messenia, including
Battle of Meligalas,
Battle of Kalamata,
Battle of Chora - Agorelitsa. The population in the area of Kalamata and Messene increased from 30,000 before World War II up to nearly 80,000 in the present day. Messenia suffered damage from the
2007 Greek forest fires. ==See also==